Hale, Ellen Day (1855, Worcester MA-1949, Brookline MA)
Much-admired Boston School painter; in Arizona in 1891 as part of Nevada
and Colorado travels. AAB

Hall, Elizabeth Boyd Hall (1903, Philadelphia PA-1974,
Santa Fe NM) A Philadelphia native who settled in Santa Fe, she "remained
a resident except for interludes in Arizona (c. 1937). . . .The Southwest,
particularly New Mexico and Arizona, provided themes for most of her work."
Her entries in the 1937 Brooklyn Museum's International Exhibition of Watercolors
included Tucson. KOV

Halseth, Edna Mae Scofield (1879, Ripon WI-1956, Phoenix
AZ) In Phoenix by 1927, was sculptor, Art Guild organizer and with husband
Odd Halseth, became curator-archaeologists for Heard Museum and City of
Phoenix. Had three portrait sculptures in 1929 Arizona State Fair. ASF,
HUG

Hamilton, Lucretia Breazeale (1908, Falls Church VA-1986,
Tucson AZ) By 1920 had moved to Pima Reservation where her father was with
experiment station; in 1935 was on Navajo Reservation with horticulturalist
husband Louis Hamilton; 1922 enrolled at Arizona State University and 1938
joined ASU faculty, becoming nationally famous plant illustrator. Elected
to Arizona Women's Hall of Fame. AHS, AZL

Hammer, Angela M. Hutchinson (1870, Virginia City NV-1952,
AZ)In Arizona Women's Hall of Fame as founder in 1914 of the Casa
Grande Dispatch; was also active as an artist.Listed in Arizona
Artists category of 1929 State Fair exhibitors with entry, Camel Back
Mountain. AHS, ASF, AZL

Harrison, Jean W. (1897, AZ) From Phoenix and married
to Laurence Harrison; in Arizona State Fair Artists category of 1925, 1927
and 1929 with oil paintings including Guadalupe and Mt McDowell;
1930-1935 landscape entries in Arizona Arts and Crafts exhibit at Museum
of Northern Arizona. AAAC, ANC, ASF

Hastings Alice Carol (1907, Arizona-1985, San Diego CA)
Born in Arizona, was taken in 1908 to California, where lived remainder
of life. HUG

Hawkins, Grace Alice Milner (1869, Bee Town WI-1944,
Palos Verdes CA) From Iowa, Montana, and California, was painter of Southwest
scenes; in 1933 had one-person shows at the Phoenix Art Association where
she was a member. HUG, KOV

Heineke, Irene M. Currier (1917, Phoenix-) Long time
resident of Phoenix and listed in census records with occupation of artist
and designer, exhibited work titled Hawaii in 1929 Arizona State
Fair. In 1948, married Warren Currier, ANC, ASF

Hemingway, Grace Hall (1872, Chicago IL-1951, Oak Park
IL) Concert singer, voice teacher, painter and mother of author Ernest
Hemingway, she took up painting at age 52. First driving trip to Arizona
was in 1928 with her brother, Leicester, to paint desert landscapes. In
1937, she gave a lecture on Nantucket Island titled "Travel and Painting
in the Great Southwest," and illustrated her talk with paintings from
the 1928 trip. AAB

Heron, Edith Harvey (1895, San Jose CA-1980, Oakland
CA) Known for watercolors, drawings and etchings; in 1942, taught art in
Poston, Arizona at Yuma County Japanese internment camp. KOV, WIK

Herr, Lucy Deere Alexander (1865, OR-1946, Sacramento
CA) Great niece of John Deere, farm equipment developer, was active painter
in Oregon and California, and in 1901 briefly in Arizona when married second
husband, Benjamin Herr, in Kingman. AAB

Hess, Harriet (1866, Benton PA-1974, Santa Ana CA) Earned
teaching degree as young person at University of Arizona; lived in Pasadena
where devoted to grade school teaching; did watercolors in leisure time.
HUG

Hill, Helen Cozens (1899, Encinitas CA-2004, San Diego
CA) Centenarian and for landscape painting was frequently in Sedona, Arizona
in early 1930s She died on her 105th birthday. AAB

Hills, Anna Althea (1882, Ravenna OH-1930, Laguna Beach
CA) Famous as a California artist and educated in the eastern United States
and Paris, she painted Arizona desert scenes as early as 1914. Her painting
Montezuma's Head-Arizona was painted in 1915. AAB

Hodge, Margaret Whitehead Magill (1863, DC-1935, York
PA) Worked in 1895 at First Mesa Hopi ruins of Sikyatki with Jesse Fewkes
and husband Frederick Hodge on Bureau of American Ethnology Project; made
"accurate, colored drawings of the excavated vessels." KRA

Hoffman, Malvina Cornell (1885, New York City-1966, New
York City) A New York and Paris oriented artist, exhibited her Navajo Indian
bronzes at Vose Gallery in Boston in 1937. KOV

Hohberger, Hazel Mildred Bobb (1895, Lyons KS-1985, Salinas
CA) Settled in Salinas in California ranch country about 1929; taught voice
lessons and painted in leisure time. Made "many trips" into Arizona"
and other Indian country sites of Southwest. HUG

Hollenbeck, Annette (1896, New Haven CT-1962, Tucson
AZ) Listed in 'Water Colors' category in exhibitions of 1929 Arizona State
Fair; entries were Pima Reservation and St. John's Mission.
Full name was Mabel Annette Hollenbeck; married Stephan Kreyns. ANC,ASF

Holmes, Harriet Morton (1876, Portland ME-1967, Phoenix
AZ) Block printer, painter, teacher, rancher and resident 'character',
moved to Arizona in 1910; taught at Tempe Normal School; was member of
Phoenix and Tucson Fine Arts Associations; exhibited work during 1920s
in State Fairs, and in "Arizona Artists Arts and Crafts" in 1930s.
AAAC, AAB, ASF

Housh, S. Henrietta Dorn (1855 Mariposa CA-1919, Los
Angeles CA) Landscape painter and teacher, from 1885 to 1889 spent first
years of marriage to William Harvey Housh living on a ranch 75 miles west
of Phoenix; spent remainder of life in California, where she taught public
school in Salinas and Pasadena, and was a member of the California Art
Club. AAB, HUG

Hudspeth, Alice Elaine (1911, Naco, AZ-1995, Los Angeles
CA) Teacher and artist, she attended the University of Arizona, and then
in 1937, married Herbert Hawkins in Tucson; by 1940, she was living in
Chandler, Arizona, and in 1944, re married, this time to Joseph Feltman.
ANC, HUG

Hughes, Edith R (1884, Ft. Wayne IN-1930, Ann Arbor,
MI) Painter, teacher and designer from the East where studied at the Boston
Museum and Pratt Institute. By 1920, she was teaching in Maricopa County,
and was referenced in May Noble's 1923 article, "Arizona Artists"
in The Arizona Teacher and Home Journal. By 1930, she had moved
to Miami Beach, Florida. ANC, FAL, NOB

Hunley, Katharine Jones (1883, Beacon IA-1964, Lynwood
CA) Married to teacher Charles Hunley, and lived in Redlands, California,
but loved painting Arizona landscapes from the south to the Grand Canyon;
exhibited oil painting, Into the West, at 1916 Arizona State Fair.
ANC, ASF, HUG, KOV

Jackson, Otellie Shula (c. 1915, Sichomovi, AZ-) From
a family of carvers and basket makers, she is "recognized as the first
woman carver of Hopi Katsina dolls." Her husband was blind, and she
supported him and her eight children. Her motto was: "Never leave
home without your tools; you can always make a living carving." SCK

James, Rosalie (early 20th, NM) One of first students
of Dorothy Dunn in Santa Fe, she became a genre artist of her Navajo culture
including Navajo ritual chant scene painting, Night Singers and Drummer,
1936. AAB, BRO

Jenkins, Miriam Brooks (1885, Salt Lake City UT-1944,
Santa Ana CA) Musician and fine art impressionist painter who signed her
work MBJ, she settled in southern California but visited Arizona where
she painted the Grand Canyon. AAB, HUG, KOV

Johnson, Elena Mix (1889, Nogales AZ-1939, Raleigh NC)
Born in frontier Arizona and lived in border territory with Mexico as wife
of Alexander Johnson, a United States Cavalry officer; had painting talent
and following her husband to eastern assignments, acquired sophisticated
art education including at The Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. FAL

Johnson, Elizabeth Viola (1878 Saugatuck, MI-1951, Phoenix, AZ)
Sculptor, teacher, and founder of Oxbow Art Colony in Saugatuck, Michigan,
was in Phoenix by 1930. For WPA Index of American Design, she did
a watercolor of the brand of Lazy B Ranch near Wilcox, owned by family
of H. Alan Day and Sandra Day O'Connor, Supreme Court Justice; illustrated
in Betsy Fahlman's book, New Deal Art in Arizona. AAB, FAHND

Jones, Grace Church (1868, West Falls NY-1959, Pueblo
CO) Educated in New York and Paris, and known for landscapes of France,
eastern United States, and American Southwest. In 1911 she exhibited her
painting Arizona Hills at Denver Art Club. KOV

Joullin, Lucile Wilcox (1878, Geneseo, IL-1924, San Francisco
CA) From 1916 often traveled alone and painted in New Mexico and Arizona,
"gaining a reputation both as an artist and authority on Indian culture."
Was much influenced towards Southwest Indian subjects by second husband,
Amedee Joullin. KOV

Keener, Anna Elizabeth Wilton (1895, Flagler CO-1982,
Santa Fe, NM) Block printer, painter, and educator, she taught in Globe,
Arizona public schools after World War I before settling in New Mexico
in 1942. KOV, POW

Kent, Dorothy (1888, Tarrytown NY-1981,NM) Painter
and musician, in 1916 joined group of first 'white ' horseback riders to
enter Arizona through Indian country. Moving to Utah and camping at Rainbow
Bridge, she "serenaded her dusty, sunburned, chap-hat-and boot-bedecked
audience with a concert---surely a first in the history of classical music,
and of this legendary monument." AAB, DAW, POL

Kissel, Eleanora Morgan (1891, Morristown NJ-1966, Norwalk
CT) Prolific painter in New Jersey and Massachusetts, was at Grand Canyon,
Arizona in 1935 but "devoted most of her energy to painting scenes
around Taos. KOV

Klinker, Orpha Mae (1891, Fairfield IA-1964, Hollywood
CA) Portrait, history, genre, and desert landscape painter from Los Angeles;
was in Arizona in the 1930s where painted the Grand Canyon and did research
for a series of portraits, "Speaking of Pioneers." AAB, KOV

Krehbiel, Dulah Marie Evans (1875, Oscaloosa-1951, Evanston
IL, IA) "Golden Age" illustrator, painter and photographer, arrived
in Arizona in 1900 as one of first women artists from Illinois. With her
sister Mayetta, she went to Phoenix via Santa Fe Railroad connection from
north to Maricopa. In 1905 returned as a Santa Fe Railroad sponsored photographer.
AAB